Point-Free is a video series exploring advanced topics in the Swift programming language, hosted by industry experts, Brandon and Stephen.

We dissect some of the most important and interesting topics in Swift programming frequently, and deliver them straight to your inbox.

We cover both abstract ideas and practical concepts you can start using in your code base immediately.

Download a fully-functioning Swift playground from the episode so you can experiment with the concepts discussed.

We transcribe each video by hand so you can search and reference easily. Click on a timestamp to jump directly to that point in the video.

We are going to take a Swift feature into the browser. We will set up a WebAssembly application from scratch, show how to run and debug it, and even set up some basic UI. And then we will integrate our existing model into it, all powered by the magic of Swift’s Observation framework.

It’s time to go cross-platform! We will take a feature written in Swift and use it in vastly different situations, including not only SwiftUI and UIKit, but beyond Apple’s frameworks and ecosystems. We will start with a baby step and introduce our feature to a third party view paradigm, Airbnb’s Epoxy.

We finish building a modern UIKit application with brand new state-driven tools, including a complex collection view that can navigate to two child features. And we will see that, thanks to our back-port of Swift’s observation tools, we will be able to deploy our app all the way back to iOS 13.

We round out our series with one more feature: the ability for our users to manage a list of their favorite facts. It will allow us to explore a complex side effect, persistence, and show how the same Swift code can save and load data across iOS app launches and web page refreshes.

We’ve already covered a lot of ground and could have ended the series last week, but let’s do a few more things to show just how powerful cross-platform domain modeling can be by adding a new feature to our cross-platform application and see just how easy it is to integrate with SwiftUI, UIKit, and WebAssembly.

We will introduce UI controls and focus logic to our SwiftWasm application by leveraging a binding type inspired by SwiftUI, and we will see how similar even our view logic can look across many platforms.
SwiftUI is Apple’s declarative successor to UIKit and AppKit, and provides a wonderful set of tools for building applications quickly and effectively. It also provides a wonderful opportunity to explore problems around architecture and composition.
Architecture is a tough problem and there’s no shortage of articles, videos and open source projects attempting to solve the problem once and for all. In this collection we systematically develop an architecture from first principles, with an eye on building something that is composable, modular, testable, and more.
Swift has many tools for concurrency, including threads, operation queues, dispatch queues, Combine and now first class tools built directly into the language. We start from the beginning to understand what the past tools excelled at and where they faultered in order to see why the new tools are so incredible.
If you have ever created a binding using the get:set: initializer, you may want to reconsider. Doing so can hurt SwiftUI’s ability to animate your view. Luckily there is a better way. You can leverage @dynamicMemberLookup and subscripts to derive new bindings in a way that allows SwiftUI to propertly track where the binding came from.
You may have heard that “mocks are bad” and that they cause you to test the mock rather than your application’s actual feature. That doesn’t have to be the case. It is totally fine to mock a dependency to a system that you do not control, such as the file system. You do not need to test that saving and loading with that dependency works (after all, that’s the mocked behavior!), but you should test how your application behaves when it tries to load or save data. For example, is data saved after each change to your app’s data? Or, if loading data throws an error, do you show an alert to the user?
We often need to perform async work when there is no async context, such as in SwiftUI button action closures. In such cases it seems that you have no choice but to spin up an unstructured Task, but you may have heard that doing so it bad. So what are you to do? Well, there is an easy answer…

So many concepts presented at #WWDC19 reminded me of @pointfreeco video series. 👏👏 So happy I watched it before coming to San Jose.

Three recent @pointfreeco episodes were so interesting I stayed in the treadmill 3x as long as usual and watched them all in a row! Walking may be challenging later/tomorrow... 😮

Just became a subscriber! I'm binge watching episodes now! Great content! I'm learning so much from you guys. The repo for the site is the best go-to reference for a well done project and swift-web is something I am definitely going to use in my projects. Thanks for everything!

Due to the amount of discussions that reference @pointfreeco, we added their logo as an emoji in our slack.

@pointfreeco ❤️: Thank you! 🧠: … The brain can’t say anything. It is blown away (🤯)!

Their content pushes the boundary of my knowledge, and it's fun to watch!

tfw you are excited for a 4 hour train ride because you'll have time to watch the new @pointfreeco episode 🤓🏔🚂 #MathInTheAlps #typehype

This is surely one of the best shows for Swift folks out there! The content and explanation is at a really high bar!

Watching the key path @pointfreeco episodes, and I am like 🤯🤯🤯. Super cool
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